When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Stollen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stollen

    Stollen is a cake-like fruit bread made with yeast, water and flour, and usually with zest added to the dough. Orangeat (candied orange peel) and candied citrus peel (Zitronat), [1] raisins and almonds, and various spices such as cardamom and cinnamon are added.

  3. List of twice-baked foods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_twice-baked_foods

    This term was then adapted into English in the 14th century during the Middle Ages, in the Middle English word bisquite, to represent a hard, twice-baked product. [4] The term is applied to two distinct products in North America and the Commonwealth of Nations and Europe. Pictured is an American biscuit (left) and British biscuits (right ...

  4. List of sweet breads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sweet_breads

    Chelsea bun – English type of currant bun [1] [3] Cinnamon roll – Sweet pastry; Cocktail bun – Sweet bun with coconut; Cornbread - American sweet, salty cake made from cornmeal. Coffee cake, a sweet bread intended to be eaten with coffee [10] Colomba di Pasqua – Italian traditional Easter cake

  5. 9 Aldi German Christmas Treats To Try This Holiday Season

    www.aol.com/9-aldi-german-christmas-treats...

    1. Soft Gingerbread. Gingerbread is one of the quintessential Christmas flavors and Aldi offers a few variations of the Yuletide treat. The soft gingerbread comes in a pack of six cookies: three ...

  6. Lebkuchen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebkuchen

    Unlike other cities where women could bake and sell the holiday cookies at will, in Nuremberg only members of the baker's guild were allowed to bake the cookies. [8] Mould used for marzipan or Lebkuchen, 17th/18th century, collection of the Oberhausmuseum. Since 1808, a variety of Nürnberg Lebkuchen made without flour has been called ...

  7. Why You Should Make A Christmas Stollen This Holiday Season

    www.aol.com/news/why-christmas-stollen-holiday...

    For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us

  8. Pfeffernüsse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pfeffernüsse

    The cookie has been part of yuletide celebrations since the 1850s. [12] The name literally means 'peppernuts', and does not mean it contains nuts. The cookies are roughly the size of nuts and can be eaten by the handful, which may account for the name. [13] [14] They are named for the pinch of pepper added to the dough before baking. [15]

  9. Confectionery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confectionery

    Confectionery can be mass-produced in a factory. The oldest recorded use of the word confectionery discovered so far by the Oxford English Dictionary is by Richard Jonas in 1540, who spelled or misspelled it as "confection nere" in a passage "Ambre, muske, frankencense, gallia muscata and confection nere", thus in the sense of "things made or sold by a confectioner".